Conferences and study days

Organised by:Véronique CHANKOWSKI, Director of the FSAAmélie PERRIER, Director of Studies (Ancient and Byzantine Worlds) at the FSATassos ANASTASSIADIS, Director of Studies (Early Modern and Modern Eras) at the FSA

Lectures

Organised by:Véronique CHANKOWSKI, Director of the FSAAmélie PERRIER, Director of Studies (Ancient and Byzantine Worlds) at the FSATassos ANASTASSIADIS, Director of Studies (Early Modern and Modern Eras) at the FSa

The Research Technology in Human Sciences Seminar

The aim of the Research technology in Humanities seminar is to bring together the different actors of research in order to discuss methods and tools used in Humanities and Social Science disciplines, such as Archaeology, History, Geography and Sociology, in order to present techniques and specialties that are not so well known or that are new, as well as to share experiences and good practices. Specialists of spatial analysis, of digital recognition tools, of material and residues analysis, of databases, of network analysis, of restauration, etc. will be participating in this seminar.

The meetings will take place on Mondays at 7pm, on a monthly basis, in the Lecture Room of the FSA.

Organised by:Amélie PERRIER, Director of Studies (Ancient and Byzantine Worlds) at the FSA

Μέλη

The French School at Athens (EFA) and the American School of Classical Studies at Athens (ASCSA) are inaugurating a new cycle of lectures intended to present the research of their respective junior members. This platform is intended to stimulate discussions and exchanges among the members of the Foreign Schools. It promotes the research of the EFA and ASCSA junior members, as well as young scholars associated with the two Schools.
The meetings will take place on Tuesdays at 6pm (on a monthly basis), alternately in the Lecture Room of the EFA (Didotou 6) and in the Wiener Lab at the ASCSA.

Numismatic Meetings

Organised jointly by the Belgian School at Athens (EBSA), the National and Kapodistrian University of Athens (EKPA), the National Hellenic Research Foundation (EIE-IIE/TEPA), the French School at Athens (EFA) and the German Archaeological Institute at Athens (DAI), the Numismatic Meetings are held on a monthly basis, on Mondays at 7pm.
The seminar aims to highlight trends in numismatic research in Greece, by drawing attention to the strength of the links that unite this discipline with history and archaeology. Indeed, all sources and all fields associated with numismatics may be the subject of papers: technology, metrology, iconography, and monetary, financial and economic history.
Speakers, from Greece and elsewhere, are invited to give presentations on the current state of the discipline, new research, or major new finds, in a lecture lasting about an hour, followed by questions.

Organised by:Panagiotis Iossif, Belgian School at AthensSéléné Psôma, University of AthensHarikleia Papageorgiadou, National Hellenic Research FoundationAmélie Perrier, French School at AthensIrini Marathaki, German Archaeological Institut Athens

SSH in progress

This closed seminar offers researchers who are completing/have just completed their HDR (habilitation à diriger des recherches) or who are running a funded program (ANR, ERC,…), the opportunity to present a methodological or theoretical difficulty they have encountered in this context. They shall submit to participants' prior reflection certain texts that make possible to discuss a theoretical concept, a historiographical controversy, an epistemological break, or a methodological innovation. Thus, after a short presentation by the speaker, the discussion will start from the texts sent beforehand.

Organised by:Tassos ANASTASSIADIS, Director of Studies (Early Modern and Modern Eras) at the FSA

Newsletter

Our Videos

Archaeology in Greece ONLINE

Gremoulias Chelmou Kalavriton

Gremoulias Chelmou Kalavriton. Georgia Alexopoulou (ΣΤ’ ΕΠΚΑ) reports on further excavation at the ancient temple, with work focused in the western end of the cella where the south-west corner and southern and western walls were located (Fig. 1), consisting of two courses of limestone blocks Approximately 2.5 m. to the south, the southern peristasis of the temple was also...